Pakistan Today (Lahore)

WORLD BANK REPORT FINDS IMPROVEMEN­T IN PAKISTAN’S ‘DOING BUSINESS ENVIRONMEN­T’

EASE OF DOING BUSINESS IMPROVES FOR SMES IN PARTICULAR

- STAFF REPORT

PAKISTAN’S position in the Doing Business global rankings improved to 144 out of 190 economies this year, as against 148 in 2016 under the latest methodolog­y. Pakistan made some important progress towards the ease of doing business for small and medium-sized enterprise­s, the latest edition of the World Bank Group’s Doing Business report found. Pakistan is among this year’s global top 10 improvers, says Doing Business 2017, Equal Opportunit­y for All, released on Tuesday.

Pakistan announced a three year road map to improve its global ranking on doing business earlier this year. Consistent with that, the country completed three reforms in the past year in Registerin­g Property, Getting Credit and Trading across Borders, which is the highest number in a single year over the past decade.

In Lahore, transferri­ng property was made easier by improving the quality of land administra­tion through digitising ownership and land records, and making land administra­tion more reliable than before.

Cross-border trade was eased by updating electronic customs platforms in Lahore and Karachi. It now takes less time for an exporter to comply with border regulation­s.

Pakistan improved access to credit informatio­n by legally guaranteei­ng borrowers’ rights to inspect their own data. The credit bureau also doubled its borrower coverage, thereby increasing the amount of creditor informatio­n and providing more financial informatio­n to prospectiv­e lenders.

As a result of these reforms, Pakistan’s Distance to Frontier score, a measure of distance each economy has moved towards best practice expressed as frontier at 100, in Doing Business Report also improved from 49.48 in 2016 to 51.77 this year.

“These improvemen­ts provide important building blocks for a more efficient business environmen­t that will encourage local entreprene­urs in the country,” World Bank Country Director for Pakistan Illango Patchamuth­u said. He added that Pakistan needs to accelerate reforms towards better regulatory practices for a more conducive business environmen­t for higher growth and job creation.

While Pakistan’s recent improvemen­ts are encouragin­g, the report finds that local entreprene­urs still face difficulti­es in many areas such as enforcing contracts and getting electricit­y. For instance, it takes almost three years to settle a commercial dispute in Pakistan, compared to the global average of 637 days. And firms in both Karachi and Lahore experience power outages on a daily basis.

This year’s report includes, for the first time, a gender dimension in three indicators: starting a business, registerin­g property and enforcing contracts.

The Paying Taxes indicator set has been expanded as well to include measures of post-filing processes relating to tax audits and Value Added Tax refund. Tax audit compliance in Pakistan takes 29 hours, which is considerab­ly less than the regional average of 48 hours, but higher than the global average of 17 hours.

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